The CareZONE van will provide care and harm-reduction services in areas of Greater Boston known to have high rates of opioid overdoses.

For CareZONE, The Kraft Center is partnering with the GE Foundation, Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program and AHOPE, a program of the Boston Public Health Commission, with support from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, The Hearst Foundation, Partners HealthCare and Ford Motor Company.

This community outreach initiative will focus on providing care and harm reduction services in areas in Greater Boston known to have high rates of fatal and non-fatal opioid overdoses. Its goal is to increase access to addiction and healthcare services, engage individuals in recovery and connect them with long-term, community-based care.

Providing Hope of Recovery

“Our country is experiencing an urgent crisis that needs creative and innovative approaches,” said Robert K. Kraft, chairman and CEO of The Kraft Group. “My family and I want to be part of the solution and provide the hope of recovery to people who may feel unnoticed by our society and who are in need of care. That’s what this is about – meeting people where they are, offering help, and engaging them in care.”

The Kraft Center was established in 2012 by a generous gift from Mr. Kraft and The Kraft Family Foundation to expand access to high quality, cost effective health care for disadvantaged populations.

The national opioid epidemic has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives with death tolls increasing 400 percent since 2000. In Boston alone, overdose deaths have almost tripled in the last five years. While lifesaving treatments for opioid use disorder are available, only five percent of people living with substance use disorders have access to the treatment they need.

CareZONE will be staffed by BHCHP’s medical group and AHOPE’s harm reduction team. It will provide on-demand, preventative care, such as screenings for tuberculosis, cancer and sexually transmitted infections, immunizations, and chronic disease management including HIV. It will also offer low-threshold treatment for substance use disorders and will offer an opportunity for individuals, many of whom are homeless, to receive overdose prevention and risk reduction counseling.

Engagement and Trust

Elsie Taveras, MD, MPH, executive director of The Kraft Center, said an average of six people per day are dying in Massachusetts from an opioid overdose, the fundamental cause being the disease of addiction. “Effective, lifesaving treatments are available now but there is substantial lack of access to treatment, particularly among our most vulnerable populations,” Dr. Taveras said. “There is also reluctance of many people to use traditional clinics or hospitals due to fear of stigma. That is the space we hope to fill with the CareZONE program.

“We see tremendous value,” she added, “in being in the community, building engagement and trust, and partnering with clinical and public health practitioners to not give up on people and offer a path to recovery.”

As part of these efforts, The Kraft Center enlisted the assistance and advice of key community leaders, first responders and healthcare providers to help develop, plan and implement a cutting-edge program that would address some of the unmet health care, mental health and addiction service needs of individuals in Boston with substance use disorder. Through this work, CareZONE aims to connect patients to a permanent medical home and facilitate access to critically important, consistent care.

“GE Foundation is committed to bringing innovative solutions to community health and leading on emerging issues such as the opioid crisis,” said Ann R. Klee, president, GE Foundation. “We’re proud to work with city and state partners to deliver comprehensive primary care, skilled in handling substance use disorders, directly to patients and communities that need it most.”

To learn more about how you can support the Kraft Center and other community health programs at Mass General, please contact us.

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